Top Banner
Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium June 24, 2014 Michael Kim, MD
39

Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Feb 24, 2016

Download

Documents

Jalen

Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium. June 24, 2014 Michael Kim, MD. objectives. Epidemiology Resources Pediatric Assessment Triangle Trauma approach Destination: how and where?. Pediatric Trauma. Leading cause of death: 1-15 yr 22 million injured / yr - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric Trauma2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

June 24, 2014

Michael Kim, MD

Page 2: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

objectives

• Epidemiology• Resources• Pediatric Assessment Triangle• Trauma approach • Destination: how and where?

Page 3: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 4: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 5: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric Trauma• Leading cause of death: 1-15 yr• 22 million injured / yr• 9.2 million ED visits• 20K deaths / yr• 50K permanent disabilities

• Economic impact: $10,000,000,000 per year

Page 6: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

6

Page 7: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 8: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Injury PreventionYou can make a difference !

Page 9: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Resources for optimal prehospital care

• Training • Equipment• Support and resources

Page 10: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

EMS pediatric education / exposure

• BLS training in pediatrics: 8 hrs• ALS training in pediatrics: 16 hrs• Percentage of pediatric runs: 10%• % of all peds runs requiring ALS: 12 %• BMV: 1 in every 1.7 years• ETT: 1 in 3.3 years• IO placement: 1 in 6.7 years

Page 11: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric and trauma training

Page 12: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric and trauma training

Page 13: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 14: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Anatomy

• Not just smaller• Bigger head• Airway• Musculoskeletal• Organ proportions• Greater surface to volume

14

Page 15: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 16: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

The percent of patient care units in the State/Territory that have the essential pediatric equipment and supplies as outlined in national guidelines.

EMSC Performance Measure 73

2010 EMSC Program

Page 17: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

The percent of patient care units in the State/Territory that have the essential pediatric equipment and supplies as outlined in national guidelines.

Wisconsin BLS PCUs: 57/203= 28% (National Average 23%)ALS PCUs: 81/353 = 23% (National Average 34%)

EMSC Performance Measure 73

2010 EMSC Program

Page 18: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

WI EMSC Pediatric Jump Kit

Page 19: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Resources

Page 20: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

• 9 y/o missing for 30 min • found face down next to rolled over ATV• no protective equipment• active hemorrhage from scalp• PNB at the scene

Page 21: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Approach to trauma patient

• Airway• Breathing• Circulation• Disability• Exposure/Environment

Page 22: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 23: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Initial Assessment

Airway• Normal speech & crying• Talking?• Crying?• Airway noises• Stridor

Appearance• AVPU• A &O• Confused• Irritable• GCS

Respiratory effort• Retraction• Rate• Nasal flaring • Grunting• Gasping• Abdominal breathing• Wheeze• Pulse oximetry• Endtidal CO2Circulation

• Heart rate• Hypotension• Mental status• Cyanosis• Pale• Cool to touch• Weak pulse• Poor capillary refill

Page 24: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Disability

Page 25: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric GCS

Page 26: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Intervention?

• No resp effort• No pulse• Cyanotic

• No movement

Page 27: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Interventions

Respiratory effort• Supplemental oxygen• PEEP• + pressure ventilation

Circulation• Stop hemorrhage• Temperature• Fluid resuscitation

Airway• Open airway• Jaw thrust (c-spine)• Oral airway• Maintainable?

Appearance• Stimulate • Interact• Support/console

Page 28: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Airway and Breathing

Page 29: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Circulation

• assessment • intervention

Page 30: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Next

• Disability (Dexi)– Glasgow Coma Scale

(age appropriate)– Brief neurologic eval– Splint and immobilize

• Exposure– Head to toe look see– Temperature control

Page 31: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Development and emotional

• Age dependent abilities and understanding– Stranger anxiety– Crying– Attitude– Reaction to…

• Intervention– Parental presence– No surprises– Distractions– Toys, bubbles, talking

31

Page 32: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Where to and how?

Page 33: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Trauma center FAQ

• What is trauma center?– All resources available for severely injured pt– Levels I - IV

• Why is trauma center important?– Mortality reduction 25% – Shorter length of stay– 24/7 pediatric specialists

Page 34: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 35: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Pediatric Trauma Center CriteriaPediatric Trauma Level Criteria (facility and personnel…)

I >200 trauma admissions/yrAt least 2 BC peds surgeon1+ BC peds orthopedic surgeon1+ peds neurosurgeonPICU and 2+ BC Peds critical care physiciansPediatric ED with 2+ BC PEM physiciansMuch MORE…

Page 36: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

How we do it.

Page 37: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

Resources

• Regional Trauma Advisory Council– http://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/Trauma/councils/index.htm

• Emergency Medical Services for Children– http://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/emsc/– http://www.chawisconsin.org– http://www.childrensnational.org/emsc/

Page 38: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium
Page 39: Pediatric Trauma 2014 Emergency Care Trauma Symposium

summary

• What is killing our children?• Pediatric assessment triangle• Know your resources• You can make a difference